Business right now is loud. AI disruption, declining trust, employees going quiet, leaders buried in meetings that don’t move anything forward. Donald Thompson isn’t trying to cover all of it. For 2026, he’s narrowed his focus to four things: leadership excellence, employee engagement, AI in the human workforce, and trust-based brand authority.
On this episode of High Octane Leadership, Don hands guest host Jackie Ferguson — two-time founder, best-selling author of The Inclusive Language Handbook, and former host of Diversity: Beyond the Checkbox — the questions, and lets her put him on the record about why these four pillars, and not the twenty other things he could be talking about.
He opens with the standard he holds himself to: “When things are broken, it’s my fault. When we miss a sales number, it’s my fault.” That’s leadership excellence in one sentence — are you a protector of your team, or a blame assigner?
Leadership Excellence: Inside the LeaderView Diagnostic
Leadership excellence is about the behaviors leaders model, not the behaviors they ask for. Don’s case: if an organization only rewards financial metrics while claiming to care about people, that mismatch becomes a cultural problem that shows up downstream, whether leadership intends it or not. This pillar is also where Don’s diagnostic tools live. LeaderView is Donald Thompson’s whole-team leadership diagnostic, measuring how senior leadership teams function together rather than scoring individual leaders, and presents a redefined take on growth mindset that’s rooted in resilience and after-action review instead of just learning.
Employee Engagement
Don’s argument is that engagement is business-critical because great leadership behavior means nothing if it doesn’t convert into how employees act when no one’s watching. He points to two reasons engagement investment keeps failing: leaders treat a single town hall like it’s enough communication (when digital marketing alone tells you it takes 12 to 15 touchpoints to land a message), and organizations run employee surveys without following through on what the feedback actually says — which breeds survey distrust instead of engagement.
AI in the Human Workforce
This pillar is deliberately not about the technology. Don’s angle is AI’s impact on culture and performance — and the recurring gap he sees is that most companies build their AI strategy around the technology first and think about the people it affects second. He shares a moment from a real strategy conversation where a CIO, an engineering manager, and a head of marketing all had to admit no one from HR was in the room when their AI strategy was briefed to the board. The bigger warning sign, in Don’s view, is employee silence — people under stress don’t complain, they go quiet, and most leaders are only watching the numbers, not the room.
Trust-Based Brand Authority
Don calls this the credibility economy: institutional trust is declining, AI-generated content is everywhere, and individual credibility has become scarce. His approach to building it is to own what you’ve done, credit who taught you, and be comfortable saying “I don’t know, I’ll get back to you” rather than spinning an answer you don’t have. He walks through this using his own relationship with author Robert Buday as an example of sharing credit instead of hoarding it.
In Episode 187 of High Octane Leadership, Thompson and Ferguson make the case that culture isn’t the soft stuff. It’s the operating system performance runs on.
This is the blueprint for everything Don is building in 2026, straight from the source.
Key Talking Points
- Culture and Performance: Two Sides of One Coin — Why treating culture as “soft” misses the point, and the technology-rollout example that shows how culture accelerates or kills execution.
- Four Pillars, Not Twenty — How Don narrowed 25 years of leadership experience down to leadership excellence, employee engagement, AI in the human workforce, and trust-based brand authority — and what he deliberately left out.
- The Missing Voice in the AI Strategy Room — The question Don asks every executive team about their AI rollout, and why the answer is almost always “no.”
- LeaderView and ReceptiveEQ (Don’s proprietary framework for timing and trust in feedback delivery) — Two diagnostic tools Don built to measure whole-team leadership dynamics and the timing and trust required for feedback to actually land.
- Employee Silence as an Early Warning Sign — Why disengaged employees don’t complain, they go quiet — and what leaders miss when they only measure the numbers.
- The Credibility Economy — Don’s case for trust-based brand authority in an AI-saturated content landscape, and the wedding reception conversation that shaped his leadership philosophy.
Chapter Markers
00:00 — Cold Open: Protector or Blame Assigner?
01:00 — Welcome & Introducing Guest Host Jackie Ferguson
02:00 — Turning the Tables: Jackie Introduces Donald Thompson
03:00 — The Big Idea: Why Culture and Performance Are Two Sides of the Same Coin
06:00 — Introducing the Four Pillars: Leadership, Engagement, AI, and Trust
12:00 — What Made the Cut (and What Didn’t) Building the Framework
14:00 — Thought Leadership vs. Self-Promotion: Where’s the Line?
17:00 — Leadership Excellence: Inside the LeaderView Diagnostic
21:00 — Redefining Growth Mindset Around Resilience, Not Just Learning
23:00 — Introducing ReceptiveEQ: Why Timing and Trust Matter More Than the Message
28:00 — Employee Engagement: Why Billions in Investment Isn’t Moving the Needle
31:00 — AI in the Human Workforce: What 88 Million Data Points Reveal
36:00 — Trust-Based Brand Authority and the Credibility Economy
42:00 — Building Brand Authority Without Don’s Platform: Advice for Narrower Lanes
47:00 — The Uncomfortable Truth: Jim Baum’s Wedding Reception Lesson
51:00 — Closing Thoughts and Where to Find Donald Thompson
About the Guest Host
Jackie Ferguson is a two-time founder, best-selling author, and award-winning strategist named to the Inc. Female Founders 200 list. She wrote the best-selling book The Inclusive Language Handbook: A Guide to Better Communication and Transformational Leadership and hosted the globally recognized podcast Diversity: Beyond the Checkbox. On this episode, she steps into the host chair to put Donald Thompson on the record about the four content pillars shaping his work in 2026.
Resources
Donald Thompson LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/donaldthompsonjr
Donald’s Newsletter & Substack: https://substack.com/@donaldthompsonjr
Donald’s Books: https://donaldthompson.com/boo…
